In a high-stakes sentencing hearing on Friday, federal prosecutors in New York urged Judge Arun Subramanian to impose an 11-year prison term on Sean ‘Diddy’ Combs, the influential hip-hop mogul convicted on two prostitution-related charges. Prosecutor Christy Slavik argued that Combs, 55, has demonstrated a lack of genuine remorse and a dismissive attitude toward the law. ‘His respect for the law is just lip service,’ Slavik stated, emphasizing that Combs had booked speaking engagements in Miami, anticipating a lenient sentence—a move she labeled as ‘the height of hubris.’
Combs’s legal team, however, requested a 14-month sentence, which would equate to time already served. Judge Subramanian noted that federal sentencing guidelines suggest a term of six to seven years but retains discretion to adjust the duration. The judge also highlighted Combs’s persistent denial of factual guilt, describing his remorse as ‘qualified.’
Combs, who submitted a letter to the court pleading for mercy, expressed fear of being separated from his family and vowed never to commit another crime. ‘I lost my way,’ he wrote, attributing his actions to a life consumed by drugs and excess. His mother and six children were present in court, submitting letters in his support.
The case stems from a federal statute prohibiting the transportation of individuals across state lines for prostitution. While jurors acquitted Combs of the more severe charges of sex trafficking and racketeering in July, sparing him a potential life sentence, the conviction on lesser counts remains significant.
Combs’s former girlfriend, Casandra Ventura, known as Cassie, provided harrowing testimony during the trial, detailing years of physical, emotional, and sexual abuse. In a letter to the judge, Ventura urged consideration of the lives Combs has ‘upended with his abuse and control.’ She recounted a 2016 incident captured on video, where Combs was seen beating her as she attempted to flee a ‘freak-off’—a term used to describe coerced sexual marathons. Ventura and her family have since relocated from New York, fearing retribution if Combs is released.
The defense did not deny Combs’s sexual activities or history of violence but argued that these actions did not meet the legal threshold for the charges he faced. Combs, who has been incarcerated in Brooklyn for over a year, described his time in prison as transformative, claiming he has been ‘humbled and broken to my core.’
